Example sentences of "[prep] people [conj] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Only in the sub-discipline within archaeology called ethno-archaeology , where archaeologists worked in contemporary ethnographic situations in order to study the relationship between peoples and their material world , was it usually impossible to ignore the social basis of material culture ( e.g. Gould ed. 1978 ; Gould and Schiffer eds 1981 ; Hodder 1982a ; Kramer ed. 1979 ) .
2 I 'd like to know more details of the circumstances of it , but one must always mourn the deaths of people whether they are innocent civilians , members of the security forces or paramilitaries , because it 's an indication that there 's a failure of the system in Northern Ireland .
3 If you ask a roomful of people whether anyone has not had any sleep in the previous twenty-four hours , it is very rare indeed to find a serious candidate .
4 I 'm fooling a lot of people 'cos I have absolutely no idea what the f— I 'm saying , to you or anyone else .
5 As Coun Carmedy has now stated in front of a large number of people that what I said was untrue , I offer him this challenge .
6 ‘ Also , that image , I guess with Kylie and Jason particularly they are the type of people that everybody would like as their daughter or son or granddaughter or niece or nephew .
7 I I 'm certainly not My Lords er un er er an unqualified admirer of all our procedures in local Government , but I do believe that before central Government is further down the road of , of erm usurping functions which are now those of local government it has to persuade a large number of people that its own performance justifies such a course and myself I do n't believe it does .
8 Not only are our brains equipped by nature to assess risks of things in a short time ; they are also equipped to assess risks of things happening to us personally , or to a narrow circle of people that we know .
9 The last I heard Trish was going to become a teacher , I mean I I we are supposed to be trying to think about whether we can have a sh a panel that we of people that we can call on for the short term crisis appointments or whatever , but
10 Who are the main area of people that we deal with ?
11 We are accountable to the public in many different ways , and we always have to keep an eye on the fact that the public are looking at what we are doing with our money and local politicians and the community 's representatives are always anxious to talk to us about what we are doing with that money and we must be prepared to answer any queries or any questions on our activities or those activities of people that we 're sponsoring .
12 middle-class people , rich people , go elsewhere ; they go and see their GP , they have a wider network of people that they could perhaps draw on ; and if they do n't they have the nine-to-five freedom from their children , the release from the pressures of having kids around ; they have boarding schools which are a legitimate way of getting rid of our children if you have the money to do it .
13 Er it did seem , it did seem , it would seem to a quite a lot of people that they were getting a good deal and they would accept that , and they would , relatively speaking , they were getting a good deal .
14 Well I think there must , this must be a very common feeling for a lot of people that they feel that they 're balanced on a knife edge .
15 which I do n't think should be allowed , go right themselves off and leave lots of people that they owe money to and ca n't get it , they get threatened
16 Cos he 's quite good in a , but it 's so easy to get wrapped up with , obviously at that age it 's very impressionable and very like they , they must look so big to a lot of people that they go out
17 Finally , there is the type of public nuisance arising out of private nuisance which affects a sufficiently large number of people that it would not be reasonable to expect one person to take proceedings on his own responsibility : see Denning L.J .
18 For example , in 1979 the steel industry employed roughly twice the number of people that it does now , producing the same amount of steel .
19 John 's script was so true and real and fine , I felt I had to do honour to that , and to the kind of people that it was talking about .
20 But generally , I do n't think there 's any group of people that I have less respect for .
21 There were a number of people that I did n't hear from .
22 But the number of people that I 've had in erm both customers and visitors like yourselves , that have been so impressed by the standards of housekeeping and cleanliness and tidiness , for an engineering facility .
23 And a lot of people that I 've spoken to who 've had problems have turned to that alternative because they could see no other .
24 The number of people that I hear saying things such as I do n't remember stepping over people in the street five years ago and it 's true , in this city I do n't actually remember doing that , not with the frequency with which it happens today and your government and your party has no record to shout about , absolutely none .
25 You see in British Steel we we have seventy thousand deferred pensioners and er it is a group of people that I feel extremely sorry for , because er in nineteen eighty-six British Steel introduced into their pension scheme while it was still in the public sector , retirement at sixty where with a pension credit spaced on length of service , so if you had thirty-five years service in , you could retire at sixty as if you were sixty-five and there was nothing done at all for deferred pensioners and in certainly our submission to British Steel for seeking improvements , we we asked that they er they look at deferred pensioner with a view to paying their pensions at sixty , recognising that it was a very high-class plane that might have to be er achieved in stages .
26 off , and there 's not a lot of people that I know of
27 Others were signed with names of characters , either characters from films or works of fiction , or the kind of people that you meet in our kind of life in our kind of city , and they 're so large , or so strong , or so infamous , that you say of them , she 's a real character .
28 They are about an interesting a bunch of people that you could ever hope to meet .
29 The first thing we 're going to think of though , are the roles of people that you have in your team and how they might be able to help you in solving the problems .
30 So those are the sort of things that , those sort of people that you definitely want .
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